Posts Archived From: 'July 2004'

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slip slidin’ away


Leaving for Denver tomorrow afternoon and will be there through Sunday night. Not only will I get to visit my dad, but my sister, Katie, is flying in from L.A. What fun!

Friday night it’ll be grilling out and boozing it up. Saturday, we’ll lay by the pool and catch the Colorado Rockies play the Arizona Diamondbacks in the evening at Coors Field. (Plus more booze, I’m sure.) Sunday, we’ll hit the Cherry Creek Shopping Center and the Tattered Cover, my favorite bookstore in Denver.

It’ll be a quick trip and probably just fly by, but it’s worth a weekend sans Nu-Trend.

Special thanks to Matthew and Jason for carting my happy ass to and from the airport :-)

’bout made my day


Chatting with my friend, Scott, online about my search for a new job. A nice compliment, albeit misspelled:

Scott Blake: you are alive
Wendy Townley: Barely. I’ve been looking for a new job. That has taken up the majority of my time.
Scott Blake: thats what chris says
Scott Blake: i cant see you getting a job that fits your tallents in this state

Maybe Scott is right, but Omaha is home for me right now. I don’t want to move. Maybe someday, but today isn’t the day. Tomorrow won’t be, either.

TOO MUCH NOISE!


For whatever reason, my once-quiet corner of the world is exploding with audible pollution this evening: two motorcyclists who decide to gun their engines and speed down my street at 40 mph. Then there’s the man next door mowing his lawn for what seems like two hours. I long for the summer evenings where I only hear children laughing, birds chirping and the leaves ruffled ever-so-gently by the wind.

Not tonight, though. I had a massive headache earlier today and am glad I took a few Advil, just in time.

I’m hungry.

agh! agh! agh!


July 26, 2004: One of the most professionally frustrating and slow moving days of my newspaper career thus far. I’ll spare you the details of how production literally moved at a snail’s pace, and how I didn’t leave the office until 8 last night.

Thank goodness it Tuesday, and the day is mine. A haircut at 2:30 p.m., for certain. The rest remains unknown, and I like that :-)

literary success strikes again


Another reason why I love eBay. This morning, an auction ended where I sold a Mac OS X mouse pad (which I got for free, mind you) for $8. I just purchased a new copy of “The Twenty-Seventh City” by Jonathan Franzen (the fourth book that will complete my Franzen collection thus far) for $4 on eBay! And to think, I was tempted to buy the book new for $12.99 at Borders a few weeks ago.

Thank you, eBay!

I’m now reading Franzen’s essays, “How to Be Alone.” I’m on his third essay. A great, great read.

about nu-trend


I really can’t wait until I find a new, better paying job so I no longer have to work seven days a week. Nu-Trend will be dropped faster than you can say mullet. I need a break. I hope that new job comes soon.

P.S. Unless I’m listening to something audibly delicious or in a specific, identifiable mood, don’t expect to see those listed at the bottom of my entries. Kapeesh?

here’s what I can’t comprehend


For the past year, every Saturday and Sunday, I’ve sat here at Nu-Trend and listened to customers drone on and on about finding themselves “a nice piece-a-land and settin’ up one of that them there modular homes.” A good number of these people come from western Nebraska. WESTERN NEBRASKA. How the hell do they have accents that sound like those from Texas or other southern states?

of course she is :-)


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you’ve got mail


I noticed something today while reading Jonathan Franzen’s “How to Be Alone.” Specifically, I was reading his essay “My Father’s Brain.”

I realized that email has resurrected the old fashioned tradition of letter writing. Specifically, written correspondence versus verbal correspondence. We’re shooting off thoughts and ideas faster than our fingers can keep up. We’re documenting history, so long as our hard drives and inboxes have enough space.

But is this making us better writers? Are we more literal because we’re writing more, and, as a result, reading more? Part of me says yes, because people can think more before writing than before speaking. We have time to form sentences and paragraphs, using words we might not use in verbal communication.

Another part of me says no, because although we can think more before writing, we don’t all of the time. The send button is too close, too easy to click, too easy to deliver our thoughts immediately and, in turn, receive feedback from the recipient.

But sometimes that feedback doesn’t arrive while we remain seated at our keyboards, waiting with bated breath the response, the chime indicating new mail, the validation that our thoughts matter, that our ideas matter, that our questions matter, that our observations matter, that we matter.

Are we creating works of fact, melded with fiction, in electronic formats, disguised in san-serif fonts? Are we just clogging our brains with random grouping of words, when we really should be sitting somewhere else, reading a damn good book and being inspired by writers who’ve long since left this earth, only to leave behind their dance of words?

Plenty to think about. More later.

riddle me this


How am I supposed to know what I’m worth, financially, when I’ve been so grossly underpaid for the majority of my professional career?

Anyone?

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